Gregory         
         What would it otherwise be based on? Science? Science is based on tentative, limited, particular empirical sense data. It's pragmatic. So there would not be universal truth according to that paradigm. — Dharmi
Qualities of experience is not matter. You're asserting this, without justification. — Dharmi
I'm not a Foundationalist, so I am not claiming certainty. — Dharmi
Dharmi         
         Of course. The one rule in science is "identical objects act identically in identical situations". Knowing there is matter is a priori to all science. — Gregory
I think that's a childish assertion — Gregory
What I am trying to say is that nobody can be a foundationalist in their reasoning. But saying "I believe in matter" is not the same thing as saying "I believe in Platonic forms". Those two assertions have nothing in common because you are matter and speculating about forms is just philosophy. You are not philosophy — Gregory
Gregory         
         People did science for thousands of years before and they weren't materialists. — Dharmi
There are no universals according to your worldview, "reality" is just a mental illness created by the chemicals in your brain and there's no ultimate meaning or purpose to life so there's no meaning or purpose to what you say, think or do — Dharmi
Dharmi         
         Platonists can think whatever they want when they do science. Their experiments are on matter regardless of what they think. — Gregory
False. Life has meaning because soul emerges from matter. Truth has no substance but the soul does. Some things are true, but I don't think "uinversals" in the Platonic sense are real — Gregory
Dharmi         
         No you need to understand you have a body when you go see your doctor. Thanks for the conversation — Gregory
Gregory         
         I'm not the body. — Dharmi
"If the world ceased to exist it would be true there was once a world although there is nothing anywhere in any sense whatsoever"
Which pure empiricism cannot justify in any way whatsoever. — Dharmi
Valentinus         
         
Gregory         
         
Dharmi         
         
Gregory         
         
Dharmi         
         In quasi-ideal Forms that do not subsist in a mind — Gregory
In material objects being either bad, non-existent, or hardly existing at all (like a shadow) — Gregory
Dharmi         
         What you mean is that the illusion breaks down, not the body? Right? That sounds psychotic, but a lot of people do believe that, pure Platonists being among them — Gregory
Gregory         
         
Dharmi         
         
Gregory         
         
Valentinus         
         In God
In quasi-ideal Forms that do not subsist in a mind
In a certain geometry of these forms
In innate ideas that represent a previous existence in the realm of Forms
In material objects being either bad, non-existent, or hardly existing at all (like a shadow)
In the body being a vehicle of the soul which is intellectual and has its home in the Forms
In escaping from the phantom world (earth) and returning to ideal existence — Gregory
Gregory         
         
Dharmi         
         We are only connected to the rest of the world in how the world effects our body (at the quantum level even).
In the West there are those who believe the soul and body are separate, and those who believe they are one.
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.